,..w , ADDRESSES MARITIME NEWSMEN 5‘: mg the regional meet- iugdjfriiysli Canadian Press at the ‘ ttetown gébgrégssat, Foreign News editor 2? (;REEN;CASTLE, Ind. (AP..)‘-— prime Minister- Harold Macmil- 13:1, said Sunday “there a.re still W, -many artificial barriers to the free flow of money and trade in the free world.” _ These barriers, he said, grew gp-—when mod-ern civilization was pits infancy and when the great" alliances had not been forged. -It was natural then to pursue ieparate and conflicting eco- nomic policies, he said, but now political aims of the British Com- inonwealth and the United States are the same and “we all face 1 common danger." "Just as the economies of the states of the union on this conti- nent grew together 200 years ).go, so, in some measure at least, must the economies of the free world today.” , Macmillan made his comments In a speech prepa.red for com- mencement exercises at De Pauw lbcal Cadets In U. S. Exercise‘ Two local U. N. T. D. Cadets, Lawrence Raymond Gallant and John Roland ll/I»acDon~ald will leave Halifax on June 4 along with 43 other U. N. T. D. Cadets for a 15 day ‘amphibious training exercise at the U. S. Naval Am- phibiovus base, Little Creek, Nor- a. ‘Hg the compreseiisive Ian {sea and air exercises, the U‘-Jl.’l‘.l‘_)~. cadets of the Royal Canadian Navy (Reserve) will Waflocated to the three bat- g of USN midishipmen, and gtlieir places as fully fledged bars of the training teams. T11 - ise will start on June Iaicarry through to June 20. The‘ Canadian contin-gent fly- hgto Norfolk is under the direc- llonof Lt.-Cdr. <13) G. H. Mar- Dartmouth, N. s. Borden Rail freight Traffic glows Increase ilfrince Edward Islanders‘ im- llllbd 340 more carloads of ., into the province via the ntine route in May 1958 “’ 1 they did in the same month as wk. C.N.R. monthly statistical released recently indica- at a total of 2,171 carloads ous types of goods were ‘- during May of 1958 in F - ison with 1,831 “ carloads into the province in 9.“ the other hand the Island T3011-ed 1,742 carloads of vari- °'§-ztypes of goods in May 1953 ..‘..90mparison with 1,401 during . same month of 1957 —— an in- qease of 341 carloads. :lecou_niing,ior most of the in- lieflse In imports were the fol- W §_ classes of goods with the M figures in brackets. Sand- M1116 and gravel"291 (25); as- “H2 15»; ties 38. rioi; lime m4).(345_); flour and feed 124 sh . fruits 17 (15). Fertilizer a decrease from 473 to wed gland L. c. L. from 264 to ,l:°i3l06s accounted for most of “1°1‘6avse_ in exports with 1.351 “ads being shipped compar- Est year. Other COMING EVENTS Dance Lorne V all H ll, June ml‘ G00d music. ey a lagzlce B_6aver Club Hall. Mon- ’ “night. Burns Orchestra. 1} . ANCE St. Peter's Bay Hall 1 and mariners. Lllgsler Supper June 25. Wed- smug“ range Hall. Summerside it ed by L.0.L.—-L.0.B.A. fibers, -11 . ’ Halfbular dance. ‘lonsliaw Inn Oichestiry Tuesday night. Burn’s tents ta: Ad"m- 50 cents plus 10 B lhviirpopular request the Vernon comegyers Present their 3- A Honda ¥;d¥ama_. "Truth Takes ~y - In a repeat perfor- Tllesd 1“. °m0l1 River H ll lain lily mghl, June 10. Cl?!‘- lllbeapa’ °°d Specialties. Final “I6: pig?‘ Usual entertainment Hotel Saturday of the Associated Press told Maritime newsmen of the de- Velolfment of news and picture services in the United States. University here. Macmillan flew from Washing- ton to make a pilgrimage to -his mother’s home state, Indiana. ‘Her father was the first medical graduate at De Pauw. ‘ MEETS IKE TODAY The prime miinister, accompan- ied by Ambassador Sir Harold Caccia and several members of his party, will remain here over- night and return to Wasliington today for conversations with President Eisenhower and State Secretary Dulles. Later he will visit Ottawa. In his university speech. Mac- millan said the Russian people “surely will not be content for ‘ever with what is called the ma- terialist doctrine," especially as revolution sinks into the back- ground and standards of living rise. Macmillan said he did not go goods accounting for the in- crease were livestock 128 (108); and Fertilizer 87 (0). The largest decrease in ex- ports was miscellaneous articles which showed a decrease of 88 over lost year’s figures. Will Probe Water. Pollution We . . InIléa§l‘:\tv“rday night. Music by’ riononrb (or) —— rne On- itario Water Resources Commis- sion will conduct an inquiry into pollution of s u b u r b a n North York’s water system, general manager Dr. A. E. Berry said Friday. Dr. Berry said a private water system operated by Rosediale Golf Club was hooked to the pub,- lic system contrary to regula- tions and untreated water ‘drawn lic mains. . Residents of the area have been instructed by health author- ities to boil drinkinig water until Monday. Aicition was taken fol- lowing complaints the water was discolored and made a number of persons ill. “The golf club’s system def- initely should not have been con- nected to the public mains and we will investigate to see if this connedtion was known or made accidentally,” Dr. Berry said. North York authorities have declined to discuss how the two mains came to be linked. The Rosedale club's water sys- tem was installed to draw river Water for watering greens. Rich Kick As Hard As Poor NEW YORK (AP)—-People who can afford luxury apartments, it seems, don't like rent raises any better than tenement tenants-— and can squa-wk just as loudly. Four prominent residents of ‘an east side luxury apartment build- ing have raised a clatter 111 the courts and issued statements to the press over just such an issue. Their landlord wants to raise their changes to'ab0‘ut $1,000 8 month or more in place of the present $400 to $700- _ It has proved to be something of a battle of the titans, because him,-self—-none other than Stavros Niarchos. multi-millionaire ship- ' i te. D1I1l1SemaagggI:_?gYed tenants include Stanton Griflfis. fofmeif U-S’ am‘ b a s s a d o r to Spain;, Colby Chester, chairman of the b031‘d. of General Foods: William I. Nichols," editor and publisihe; of This week magazine; an ean Lambert, partner In a Wall Street investment firm. They live in gulch quarters as 11 room duplexes with five baths at 25 Sutton Place. a Dc“-1aC€'11k9 structure. It is among the Swank‘ iest of the swank. _ The squabble is due for a Ju- dicial an-mg next Wednesday. BIG _.-\S THEY’LL GET iio.v‘r; KONG (Ruler-sl--Brit- ish scientist Norman Thomas Said Thursday night that nuclear bombs have reached their bi-.gg€\st tactical size. He said bigger bombers would not justify the ex- tpense of traiisporliflg them“ A \- Charles H. Peters of the Mon- treal Gazette, president of the Canadian Press is seen at the head table. Too Many Trade Barriers ls View Of Britain's P.M. I along with those who feel the struggle between the free world and the Communist world must end in war or the triumph of revolutionary communism. "I believe that to be too pessi- mistic a judgment.” He suggested the free world needs interdeipendience in politics and economics as well as defence and wondered whether statesmen today are running behind the sci- entists in adapting themselves to political and economic changes. “We ha.ve got to see that not only our military alliances but our political thought and eco- nomic policies match up to the level of the great scientific and technical advances that the world has made. “Whether it be a great Com- monwealth likeiours or a grea.t continent like yours we can no longer afford to think parochi- from the Don River got in-to pub- H their landlord is a Pretty big man’ ally.” Takes Disabled I Freighter In Tow -ROTTER-DAM («Rea-ters)~'l‘-he Dutch tug Clyde has taken the 7,255-ton Liberian freighter Pac- ific Wind in tow in the Atlantic Ocean 1,000 mlle.s north of Hall- fax, and is towing it to the Cana- dian port. The twg’s owners, L. Smith Interna-tion-al Towage Company, said Friday the Pacific Wind lost her propeller. It is expected to arrive in Halifax in nine days. The freighter is owned‘ by the Pacific Wind Trading Corpora- tion of Monrovia: Garage . High On Wanted List VANCOU_VEgR (C!P)——Most Ca- nadian housewives living in small homes would rather have a gar- age than a vestibule or extra bathroom, a Montreal delegate told the 65th annual convention of the National Council of Women Friday. - -. ‘ Mrs. Allan Turner Bone, the council’s representative on the Can"-a-diian Housing Design Coun- cil, said this was indicated by a survey carried out in Winnipeg, Vancouver, Toronto and Halifax. She said most women ex- pressed satisfaction with current trends in housing design. Let Contract For Pier Extension At North Lake OTTAWA, — The Fe-,cle1'al D9. partment of Public Works has awarded a contract in the 3m0U11t 01° $36,420.00 to Morrison- and McRae Limited of Summer- S_id€,. P. E. I., for the construc- tion of an extension to the land- ing piers at North Lake, P.E.I. Specified completion date for the project is March 3, 1959. The work included in this con- tract consists of two extensions. the eastern one of creosoted piles, waled, sheeted and tied back to anchor piles; the west- ern end of creosoted braced pile ben-ts, walled, fendered, sheeted, and covered with stringers and plank deck, and tied back to anchor piles. The eastern extension, with an overall length of 507 feet, will be constructed to form a mooring RELIGION BY VERY REV. GEORGE First Moderator of the basin 120 feet by 120 feet. The western extension will have a length of 120 feet which will in- clude a 24-foot wide slip, and a wing 48 feet long. Following the formation of the two basins the areas will be dredged to a depth of three feet below low water ordinary Spring tides. Two thousand-six hundred lineau feet of creosoted bearing piles, one thousand-one hundred lineal feet of creosoted anchor piles, and various quantities of creo- soted hardwood creosoted, tim- ber, untreated timber and steel wire rope ties will be required to complete this project. Plans and specifications were prepared by the Harbours and Rivers Engineering Branch of the Department of Public Works in Ottawa. AND LIFE C. PIDGEON, D.D., LL.D. United Church of Canada GOD’S PURPOSES REVEALED BY HIS INTERVENTION "Would you see god? Look back." This was the subject of an an- niversary sermon preached by a visiting minister in one of our churches.» . It has been said often that our “hind sight” is clearer than our “foresight": this preacher acted on that suggestion, and review God’s dealings with His people in the past to strengthen our belief in His active intervention in pres- ent-d:ay confusion and perplexity. It is a great story, but not the whole story. Moses’ exiperience of God in- spired the creation of a/nation. God's entry to the life of indivi- duals is the creative factor in his- tory. There are two features in Moses’ experience of God at the Burning Bush that must be tak- en into account today. First, God came to him as the God of his fathers. God identi- fied Himself to Moses thus: “I -am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Is- aac, and the God of Jacob.” It was on this ground that Mos- es appealed to Israel; he spoke of the God of their fathers coming to fulfill His promises. But that was only the beginning. When Moses went farther and asked God’s name the answer was. “I am who I am," or as James Mof- fatt translates it. '‘I will be who I will be.’ God is the one who ca-uses things to be. Moses was to tell Is- rael telri-ait their God was to be known by what He could do in the future even more than by what He had said and done in the past. One of Canada’s deepest needs, is a clear realization of God’s hand in her history. FRONT RANK , Among the frist French adven- vturetrs on this continent Huguenot pioneers were in the front rank. We may resent the treatment they received from those who followed them, but the deeds and sufferings of the Jesuit miantyrs are front-page items in the story of Oainada’s birth. In the early history of the Mair- itime provinces and of Ontario religious men opened the trails into the rich heritage we enjoy today. Surely we cannot but rec- ognize God’s intervention on our behalf in the struggles by which our identity as ,a separate nation was preserved? ' The God of history has not ceas- ed to act, and, as with Israel, He will reveal himself more ful- ly by what He does for WS and with us in the future. - There are two. features in God’s self-reyelavtion to Israel that bear on our conditions and obligations. The first is that human history is a “meaningful process en route to a goal.” Isiiael’s goal was the establish- ment of God’s sovereignty over all nations. A nation is brought in to being, and guarded and guided in order to fulfil some of God’s purposes f or mankind. This conception of history is taldng new forms now. Those nations who have mas- tered their circumstances and de- valoped the means and method by which nature’s resources and forces can be harnessed and made to serve the needs of men now feel called to share their wealth and knowledge with back- ward races. - Canada is one of the most high- lyfavored of all the peoples of all time, and she too must learn to share and to serve as the con- dition of her own security -and progress. With nations as with persons self-absorption is self-des- truction, and self-giving is self- realization. JEALOUS Another feature of the faith of Israel which makes demands of us still is that our God is a jeal ous God and requires His people to worship Him and Him only. Paganism is often tolerant of other forms of faith, and men in Christian lands often feel that broadmindedness requires them to give other religions a position 0 of equality with their own. Not so the prophets and apos- tles of the Bible. It is amazing to read how faith- obeyed and how far-reaching have been the consequences «of that obedience. One day the late Dr. J‘. A. Mac- donald brought into his church his favorite picture. It was of a young girl before a magistrate on trial for her faith. In the back- ground is a glimpse of the arena where Christians were thrown to the lions. In the foreground is this beautiful young woman, with the dignified old magistrate of- fering her freedom if she will worship the idol at his side. One grain of incense a-nd she is free” is his decision. But that act of worship she will not offer. That would mean putting an idol in the place of the one and only God revealed in Jesus Christ. She will die rather than make such a concession. TORMENTS Thousands of such believers did. The worship of the Roman Emperor was demanded of all his subjects in Christianity’s early days, and the faithful Christian died in torments natiher than of- fer’ it. Cyprian a bishop, urged his clergy in those persecuting days to suffer rather than yield. Then the bishop himself was brought to trial and he did what he'had Annual Meeting P.E.I." Branch Canadian Association of Consumers tist Church Hall. Guest Speaker, W. S. McMui“try, B.Sc., whose topic will be “The Importance of Buy- ing by Label”. 1 FOR RENT 1,200 square feet of floor space in the basement of the Block Building. Modern with all conveniences. ‘ MAURICE BLOCK REGULAR MONTHLY MEETING OF CITY CO*UN‘C‘IL ' ' COUNCILICHAMBFERS TONIGHT _ 1:39 ‘PM. & CO. LTD. fully that command has been Annual Meeting, Mondayl June 9 at 8:15 p.m., Bap-- CITIZENS WELCOME PUBLIC PARKING Q CENTRAL l Q CONVENIENT Supervised by Can. Legion Situated on old Prince Ed- ward Theatre lot. Rates: 25c or $2.00 weekly tract of service. . payroll. —Write-- IN’FO'RM.ATI»ON FOR EMPLOYERS REGISTRATION: Immediately upon becoming an employer under the Act it is required that such employer register with the Board and file an esti- mate of his pay roll for the current year. necessary whether the workmen are paid a stated M wage, or by piece work, or on any basis by which ‘ they -are remunerated for their labor ,under a con- As soon as an employer undertakes any opera- tion under the Actlhe is required, without request, to report to the Board and submit an estimate of Personal coverage is available for the employer himself upon request. The responsibility of protecting his workmen lies with the employer and heavy penalties will be levied upon any employer who carries on operations and fails to report to this Board. The Workmen’s Compensation Board, 123 Euston Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. INFORMATION FOR WORKMEN Workmen engaged in Industries within the Scope of this Act are entitled to protection With respect to personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of their employment. It is therefore, important that workmen know whether or not their Employer is registered with this Board thus insuring prompt handling of their claims should they be injured while in the course of their employment. For information and advice: The Workmen’s Compensation Board, 123 Euston Street, Charlottetown, This is P. E. I. |‘ {urged other to do and died Wllbll‘ lthem. So they added a new phase to the creed,” . everlasting.” “And the life In other-words, you cannot kill l,Cypri~an; there was that in him' whic God could not allow to per- ish. e owe every blessing that our Christianity has brought to mankind to those people’s con- stancy. Our danger is these times of peace is to honor God in word, while we give other interests the place of honor and influence in our activities. The divine com- mand therefore comes to us with ten-fold force: “Thou shalt wor- ship the Lord thy God and Him only shalt thou serve." Monday, June 9, 1958 The Guardian Page_3_ Consider Hour To Improve News Measures to improve the news report of The Canadian Press were considered here Saturday at the annual East regional meet- ing of the national agency. at- tended by news editors of Atlan- tic Provinices’ dailies. A panel discussion on the serv- ice was led by Roy Duchemin of the Sydney Cape Breton Post and E. ‘W. La-rracey, Moncton Times. Ben Bassett, foreign neiws edi- spoke at a luncheon given by the Charlottetown Guardian and Charlottetown Patriot. Reviewing changes in the newspaper field in the last quarter century, Mr. Ba-ssett said they had been “tremendous" in the case of P10- tures, more than 500 United States and Canadian papers W€_‘1‘9 receiving pictures over a _wire photo network. Great participa- tion in this system had reduced the cost so that even small dail- ies could afford the advantages of wirophoto service. '_ The meeting was opened, by Charles H. Peters of the Mont- real Gazette, C'P president. Bur- ton Lewis of the Charlottetown tor of The Associated» Press, Patriot was chairman. we counrv con Charlottetown Get more quality and beauty per con- “struction dollar than you believed pos- sible. And build fasoecior mnchleos than with Thellutler do you want a really building... roofistbe“oore"aro_undIifiohyoII buil&ghanelI!oecturalyatyled.ButB usgi«veyouthe,deIaik.__Calmd STRIIGTIIIII I30. LTD. 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